Process for the treatment of steel work gases

ABSTRACT

Steel work gases (blast-furnace gases, coke-oven gases, converter gases, etc.) are burnt with an exhaust gas from a gas turbine, optionally with a supply of natural gas and of air, in a combustion section between the outlet of the gas turbine and the inlet of a recovery boiler, the steam from which is utilized especially for producing electrical energy.

[0001] The present invention relates to the treatment of steel work gases such as blast-furnace gas produced in metal treatment plants.

[0002] Currently, steel work gases (blast-furnace gases, coke-oven gases and converter gases) are burnt in conventional boilers, using atmospheric air as oxidizer. This arrangement does not allow significant thermal and/or electrical powers to be achieved. More recently, it has been proposed to burn steel work gases in gas turbines, thereby requiring expensive pretreatments (dust removal, compression to pressures up to 30 bar) of these gases and consequently require the compressors and combustion chambers of the turbines to be adapted.

[0003] The object of the present invention is to provide a novel process for the treatment of steel work gases, allowing them to be treated and utilized in an optimum fashion by burning them in a combustion section of a gas turbine and, downstream, in a recovery boiler, thus combining the production of electricity by the turbine with the efficient production of thermal energy in the recovery boiler.

[0004] To do this, according to one feature of the invention, the process for the treatment of steel work gases is characterized in that it comprises the steps of sending the steel work gas into at least one combustion section between the gas outlet of a gas turbine and the gas inlet of a recovery boiler and of burning the steel work gas in the said combustion section in order to produce steam in the recovery boiler.

[0005] Moreover, such a process offers great operating flexibility, being suitable for plants in which the flow rate and/or calorific value of the steel work gas vary/varies greatly.

[0006] This type of process also makes it possible to treat large volumes of steel work gas and, correspondingly, to achieve considerable installed powers, exceeding 200 MW.

[0007] According to other features of the invention:

[0008] the process includes the step of furthermore introducing a stream of fresh air, at least locally, into the combustion section in order to ensure combustion of the steel work gas;

[0009] the process includes the step of furthermore introducing a stream of combustible gas, at least locally, into the combustion section in order to guarantee combustion of the steel work gas, especially when its calorific value becomes very low.

[0010] Further features and advantages of the present invention will emerge from the following description of embodiments, the description being given by way of entirely non-limiting illustration, with reference to the appended drawing in which:

[0011] the single figure schematically represents a combined plant for the implementation of a process according to the invention.

[0012] The single figure shows a gas turbine unit 1 supplied with gaseous or liquid combustible gas 2, for example natural gas, and driving a generator 3 delivering electrical energy.

[0013] The exhaust gases from the turbine of the gas turbine unit 1 are sent into a duct provided with a flue 5. However, according to the invention, the duct 4 emerges in a combustion section 6 with a divergent profile emerging, in turn, in the inlet section of a recovery boiler 7 provided with a gas flue 8 and with a steam output circuit 9.

[0014] Placed in the combustion section 6 are rows of burners 10 fed, on the one hand, by at least one steel work gas supply circuit 11 a, 11 b, 11 c coming from various steelmaking plants, typically blast furnaces and/or coke ovens. In one particular embodiment, the burners 10, or auxiliary burners of the latter, are able to be fed with gaseous fuel, typically natural gas, via a supply pipe 12.

[0015] In addition, according to one aspect of the invention, the combustion section 6 includes, upstream of the rows of burners 10, injector rails or nozzles 13 for injecting an oxidizer gas, slightly compressed by a blower 14. The oxidizer gas is typically atmospheric air and/or atmospheric air combined with a portion of the exhaust gases from the recovery boiler 7, supplied by a pipe 15.

[0016] According to one particular aspect of the invention, in order to take into account any fluctuations in flow rate and in calorific value of the steel work gases injected into the burners 10, the nests of exchanger tubes in the boiler 7, at least in the front part of the latter, can be selectively partially protected by heat screens 16, for example of the water-film type.

[0017] Conventionally, the steam available at the outlet (9) of the recovery boiler 7 is at least partly expanded in a turbine 17 driving a generator 18, another portion 19 of the steam being used for other industrial processes.

[0018] The process according to the invention applies to steel making plants, entailing the burning of large and variable amounts of steel work gases having a low NCV (Net Calorific Value), which is typically about 3500 kJ/Sm³ but which can fall to values of between 3100 and 3200 kJ/Sm³. When the NCV becomes very low, the flame of the burners 10 is supported by an auxiliary stream of natural gas 12 corresponding to between 3 and 10% of the energy power of the steel work gases 11 a, b, c.

[0019] Should the gas turbine stop or should there be peaks in the production of steel work gases, the combustion of the latter takes place by injecting air or air and recycled gases introduced via the injector rails 13 so to maintain the nitrogen oxide and carbon monoxide emission levels at the outlet of the flue 8 at low values.

[0020] Symmetrically, the gas turbine 1 may operate autonomously, without combustion of these exhaust gases, a structure of pivoting dampers 20 preventing access of the gases to the combustion station 6 and deflecting them into the actual flue 5 of the turbine 1.

[0021] An illustrative embodiment of a plant for the implementation of such a process will now be given.

[0022] The turbine 1 is of the type capable of producing 70 MW_(e) of electrical power, which propels into the combustion section 6 a stream of exhaust gases at a rate of 200 kg/s and a temperature of between 500 and 600° C. The exhaust gases from the turbine have a residual oxygen content of between 14 and 15% and a water content of greater than 5%. The steel work gases, typically at a temperature of less than 80° C., are injected into the burners 10 at a very low pressure, of less than 1.5×10⁵ Pa and typically of between 1.05×10⁵ Pa and 1.3×10⁵ Pa. These steel work gases, with an NCV of about 3400 kJ/Sm³, essentially consist, besides predominantly nitrogen, of CO (at least 20%) and CO₂ (up to 20%) with a hydrogen content and a water content which are each less than 2%. The turbine 1 is designed to deliver an exhaust gas mass flow rate of at least 2.5 times the maximum flow rate of steel work gases to be treated. The flow rate of oxidizer air (pure or mixed) 13 is, should the turbine stop, greater than 60%, typically approximately 70%, of the nominal flow rate of exhaust gases from the turbine.

[0023] The process according to the invention makes it possible to deliver a combustion power of between 50 and 200 MW_(th), under conditions indicated in the table below, for a recovery boiler operating with a steam pressure of approximately 100×10⁵ Pa absolute and a steam temperature of about 550° C. Boiler inlet Boiler inlet Combustion exhaust-gas exhaust-gas power temperature flow rate Steam flow rate MW_(th) ° C. kg/s kg/s  50 720 230 50 200 1020 290 100 200 (fresh air) 850 220 60

[0024] Although the present invention has been described in relation to particular embodiments, it is not limited thereby but is, on the contrary, capable of modifications and variants which will be apparent to those skilled in the art. In particular, depending on the volumes and the number of sources of steel work gases, the latter may be burnt in at least two plants of the type described above, these acting in parallel and/or alternately. 

What is claimed:
 1. A combined installation located adjacent a steel work plant producing waste gas, the installation comprising: a gas turbine having an exhaust gas outlet; a recovery boiler having a hot gas inlet; a combustion section between the exhaust gas outlet and the hot gas inlet; means for supplying at least part of the waste gas and external fuel gas to the combustion section; and burner means for burning at least part of the waste gas in the combustion section to provide heat to the recovery boiler.
 2. The installation according to claim 1, further comprising means for introducing a stream of air into the combustion section in order to ensure combustion of the waste gas.
 3. The installation according to claim 1, further comprising means for introducing a stream of combustible gas into the combustion section in order to ensure combustion of the waste gas.
 4. The installation according to claim 1, wherein the means for supplying at least part of the waste gas supply the waste gas into the combustion section at a pressure of less than 1.3×10⁵ Pa.
 5. The installation according to claim 1, further comprising means for supplying the waste gas at a flow rate of between 15 and 100 kg/s.
 6. The installation according to claim 5, wherein the exhaust gas outlet provides a flow rate of exhaust gas from the turbine at least 2.5 times the maximum flow rate of waste gas.
 7. The installation according to claim 2, wherein the means for introducing a stream of air provide a flow rate of air greater than 60% of the nominal flow rate of exhaust gas from the turbine.
 8. The installation according to claim 1, further comprising a heat screen for protecting front exchange sections of the recovery boiler. 